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STANWJX CH/VPTFR 



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MANUAL 

OF 

FORT STANWIX CHAPTER 

DAUGHTERS OF THE 

AMERICAN REVOLUTION 

1907. 



Copyright 1907, by Fort Slanivix Chapter, T). A. R. 
•RorT,e, N. Y. 






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JUL 30 lyuz 

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From the shop and the farm and the forum. 
From the cabin, the cot and the hall. 

From the emigrants' camp in the forest. 
They mustered at Liberty s call. 

Cave, unstinting, their blood and their treasure 
For manhood, and justice, and right. 

Undismayed amid darkness and treason. 
Fighting on into freedom and light. 

Here's a tear to our grandsires' remembrance. 
Here are thanks for their victory won. 

Here's a hand to push on thro' the ages 
The good rvorf( so grandly begun. 

And here, on the site of Fort Stanwix, 
Where "Old Glory" was first unfurled. 

Is the vow of their "Daughters" devotion. 
To the bonniest flag in the world. 

Mary L. Bissell, (1896.) 



FORT STANWIX. 

The construction of Fort Stanwix was com- 
menced August 23, 1 758, by the troops under 
Brigadier General Stanwix under an order from 
General Abercrombie and nearly completed in No- 
vember of the same year, and was named in honor 
of General Stanwix. It was an unequal sided 
quadrilateral with bastions at the corners. Its cir- 
cumference was 1 ,690^2 feet — more than that of 
either Fort Edward or Fort William Henry. It 
was the second most costly fort built by the Brit- 
ish Government in the colonies and cost £60,000. 
It was formed of earth and sod embankments with 
horizontal wooden pickets at the parapet and ver- 
tical ones in the center of the moat. Within the 
fort were the magazine, quarters for the men and a 
parade ground. The construction of the fort was 
for the purpose of guarding the Oneida Carrying 
Place, then unprotected by the destruction of Forts 
Bull and Wilhams. 

On November 5, 1 768, there was executed here 
a deed between the whites and Indians establishing 
a boundary line from the lower end of ihe Ohio 

5 



River to Wood Creek, the Indians to retain control 
of the territory north and west of the line. This 
deed was signed by the six chiefs of the confed- 
eracy of the Six Nations convened here by Sir Will- 
iam Johnson. 

From the close of the French and Indian wars 
to the Revolutionary war the fort went into decay, 
but was repaired in 1777 by the troops of the Third 
New York Regiment under Col. Peter Gansevoort 
and Lieut. Col. Marinus Willett. The siege of the 
fort by St. Leger and his force of 1 ,600 regulars, 
tones and Indians was begun August 3. 1777, and 
lasted until August 22nd. Gansevoort's garrison 
numbered about 750 men. Willett's sortie from the 
fort, attracting, by the sound of the guns, the at- 
tention of the British at Oriskany, caused a diversion 
to be made to Fort Stanwix and helped make the 
battle of Oriskany one of the decisive battles of the 
Revolution. 

Here between August 3 and 6, 1777, the Stars 
and Stripes were first unfurled in battle in Willett's 
famous sortie, the flag, as described in Willett's 
Narrative, being made from white ammunition 
shirts for the white r tripes, from a camlet cloak 
taken from the enemy at Peekskill for the blue, 
6 



and from different pieces of stuff procured from 
one and another of the garrison for the red stripes. 

On October 22, 1 784, the Treaty of Fort Stan- 
wix was made here between the chiefs and warriors 
of the Six Nations and commissioners of the United 
States. By this treaty the Indians reHnquished claim 
to a large portion of the territory north of the line 
given in the deed of 1 768. This was the first treaty 
made by the Six Nations with the United States 
after the Revolutionary War. Brant, Red Jacket 
and Cornplanter were present, as well as Lafayette. 

Fort Stanwix went gradually into disuse and de- 
cay after the Revolutionary War and was entirely 
demolished soon after I 820, — but recently was care- 
fully surveyed and marked by cannon placed near 
the four bastions by the Gansevoort-Willett Chap- 
ter, Sons of the American Revolution, and by 
bronze tablets placed on the gun carriages by Fort 
Stanwix Chapter, Daughters of the American Rev- 
olution. 

Charles C. Hopkins. 



ORDER OF EXERCISES. 

Singing. — America. 

Regent. — Daughters, we meet as descendants of 
men and women who set the world a glorious exam- 
ple of lofty and unselfish patriotism. As we revere 
their lives and deeds, let us pledge ourselves anew to 
loyal service to the fatherland, to the upholding of 
its standard and the upbuilding of patriotic charac- 
ter. 

Prayers. — No. 1 or No. 2 or No. 3. 

No. 1. 

O most powerful Lord God, blessed and only 
Potentate, who hast granted unto our country lib- 
erty, and established our Nation in righteousness by 
the people's will: Guide and direct the multitude 
whom Thou hast ordained in power, by Thy pure 
wisdom and Thy just laws; that their counsels may 
be filled with knowledge and equity, and the whole 
estate of the Commonwealth be preserved in peace, 
unity, strength and honour; that the people may 
prosper in freedom beneath an equal law, and our 
Nation may magnify Thy Name in all the earth; 
through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen. 
9 



No. 2. 

O thou Infinite Presence, be so vitally near us 
that all thoughts of thy remoteness shall fall away. 
When selfish and unloving we are shut from each 
other and from thee, O God, while the glowing 
heart of love brings thee out of the distant and the 
dim to the clear and near. The mists that cloud our 
vision are all within. Slowly down over the 
wearied world, unloosed by thy hand, falls the 
darkness ; in this hour we would be conscious of the 
still working of thy power. 1 hine are the vast de- 
signs in which we would have our own disappear. 
Here and now we would put ourselves in communion 
with the heroic dead in the nation's past whose de- 
posits of word and deed make up the background 
of Hfe from which the hero is ever speaking to us in 
terms of patriotic devotion. This background of 
life, what is it but a broad garden in which thou 
hast planted many a flower. Yet to wander there 
in that past glory, breathing the perfume of bygone 
consecration, is not for us to serve our Country. To 
pedestal heroes m granite is not to be a hero oneself. 
We thank Thee for the great law of sacrifice, so 
woven into life, individual and national, and under 
it may we have found our place in the broad sacra- 
ment of human service. May the men and women 

10 



that v/e are yet to be, rise so steadily that what we 
now are may speedily cease to be. We ask that the 
past be so clearly interpreted as not to misguide us. 
May we not think that by going back to the fields 
skirted by receding duties, but by going on, obedient 
to the newly risen claim, do we find union with the 
hero. All heroes have the one same spirit, the dead, 
the living; may we have it too. O God, may no 
fervor of admiration over the courage of a fore- 
father cover from our eyes our own moral timidity. 
Make us brave in the heroics of war, if need be, and 
in those of peace in their unending demand. Give 
to us the passive courage that bears, the active 
courage that dares. Reveal to us the limits of our 
faith and the possibiHties of our devotion. As with 
the hero on the field, may we not be joyless in the 
presence of death. Like the voice of the thrush sing- 
ing in the rain, may our confidence in Thee pour it- 
self out under whatever change of circumstance. Re- 
new within us the sense of triumph and of joy. Give 
unto us, O thou still and quiet God, the quiet mind 
and heart, especially when the winds of passion blow 
across the threshing floor of the nation and weak men 
lose their footing. May we not be lovers of fierce 
war, but embody in ourselves the beatitude of the 
peacemakers. May there fall upon us from this serv- 

11 



ice, as dew from perfumed herbs, joy and profit. 
May we glory in the repubhc and be such true 
friends of the people that the republic may glory in 
us. Hasten the day when all heroes shall shine in 
their true luster. Whether it be ours to shine or not 
we would have God's light shine through us, we 
keeping lowly for the upbuilding of his everlasting 
kingdom. 

Dr. H. H. Peabody. 

No. 3. 

Our father's Cod! from out whose hand 
The centuries fall like grains of sand. 
We meet today, united, free. 
And loyal to our land and Thee, 
To thank Thee for the era done. 
And trust Thee for the opening one. 

Oh make Thou us, through centuries long. 

In peace secure, in justice strong; 

Around our gift of freedom draw 

The safeguards of Thy righteous laiv; 

And cast in some diviner mould. 

Let the nen> cycle shame the old! 

Whittier. 



12 



Response. — (after each prayer) Amen. 

Regent. — This nation is the product of the live,; of 
earnest men with hearts stirred by noble principles 
and seeking freedom in their use. Three centuries 
ago, in the name of God, for the sake of right 
dearest to mankind, they left their own motherland 
and in their day of small things came here. For 
more than a century did these hardy colonists strive 
mid daily and nightly peril, in hunger and loneliness, 
against savage beasts and a mere savage foe ; until 
the wilderness was won and a chain of common- 
wealths forged which should through all time stand 
for righteousness, liberty and justice. 

Response. — Our fathers trusted in Thee; they 
trusted and Thou didst deliver them. 

Regent. — Then came a bitter struggle of years 
with rival fees for possession of the great central 
plain, yea, for the very soil they had found and 
made their homes; the land consecrated by their suf- 
ferings and sanctified by their buried dead; but in 
spite of fcreign guile and savage craft, they met and 
overcame the alliance of French and Indian all along 
their forest frontier and at last established the sway 
of the Anglo-Saxon race o'er all our land. 

13 



Response. — The Lord hath strengthened the bars 
of thy gates, he hath blessed Thy children within 
thee. 

Regent. — But soon was dimmed the joy of the 
common triumph over the enemies of foreign race and 
tongue. For the helping hand of the mother coun- 
try became that of the oppressor and was lifted in 
harsh injustice against our patriot fathers. Petition, 
remonstrance, argument and entreaty were found to 
be in vain ; and confident of the righteousness of 
their cause and believing all other resources to be of 
no avail and appealing to the Supreme Judge to 
defend the right, in the day of their extreme need 
they raised the banner of resistance and proclaimed 
to the world a solemn and momentous Declaration of 
Independence. 

Response. — The God who gave us life gave us 
liberty at the same time. 

Regent. — With hardy valor they drew their 
swords and sheathed them not till they had won in- 
dependence and their inalienable rights were secured 
to them by their own right hand, toiling and striv- 
ing under the precious providence of God. With 
wisdom in council, with valor in conflict, amid pri- 
14 



vation, discouragement and distress, in spite of tory 
hate and sinister treachery, they poured forth their 
treasure and their blood as water, they endured 
wounds, torture and the lingering death of the prison- 
ships for the common safety. And from such soil 
blossomed the white flower of our freedom. 

Response. — For the Lord hath done great things 
for us whereof we are glad. 

Regent. — As the daughters of such sires and of 
those brave women whose tender eyes looked on and 
encouraged their deeds and who shared their suffer- 
ings, toil and sacrifices, let us strive to serve our 
fatherland and to arouse in every heart a pure and 
passionate love of country. Let us do our part in safe- 
guarding with God's help a republic that shall stand 
unshaken as a stately and enduring fabric in which 
countless generations may come to the blessings of 
liberty regulated by law. As the homekeepers of 
this nation, let us cherish the purity and sweetness of 
our family life, maintaining there twin altars of piety 
and patriotism. 

Invocation. — 
''Lord of the Universe! shield us and guide us. 

Trusting Thee a/lPaps, through shadow and sun! 
Thou hast united us, who shall divide us.^ 

Keep us, O ^eep us the Many-in-one!'' 
15 



Regent. — We, of this chapter, hold in special re- 
membrance that Httle band of noble men and wom- 
en, who, in the lonely frontier post, in the midst of a 
long and perilous siege, yet with the strong desire 
ever present in loyal hearts for the visible symbol of 
the principles for which they strive, fashioned out of 
homely materials their first flag. In the face of 
overwhelming numbers, amid danger and privation, 
the brave defenders of Fort Stanwix, made strong 
through their faith in the right and justice of their 
cause, proudly unfurled for the first time in battle 
the Stars and Stripes and won the victory. 

Response. — Let us, their daughters, honor and up- 
hold the flag they loved and the principles for which 
they were willing even to lay down their lives. 

Regent. — 

"Cod of our Fathers, k^otvn of old. 
Lord of our far-flung battle line. 

Beneath whose arvful hand we hold 
Dominion over palm and pine. 

Lord Cod of Hosts, be rvith us \je/." 

Response. — ''Lest rve forget. Lest Tve forget." 

Singing. 

16 



BY-LAWS 
of the 

FORT STANWIX CHAPTER 

of the 

DAUGHTERS OF THE 

AMERICAN REVOLUTION. 



ARTICLE 1. 

Name and Membership. 

Section 1 . The name of this Chapter shall be 
"Fort Stanwix Chapter" of the Daughters of the 
American Revolution. 

Sec. 2. The qualifications and requirements for 
membership in this Chapter shall be the same as pro- 
vided by Section 1 of Article III of the Constitution 
of the National Society of the Daughters of the 
American Revolution. 

Sec. 3. Every applicant for membership must be 
endorsed by at least one member of the Local Chap- 
ter, and her application shall then be submitted to 
the Board of Management who shall pass on the 
same, and repcrt thereon at a regular meeting. 
17 



Sec. 4. The applicant, after payment of the in- 
itiation fee and acceptance by the National Society, 
shall be enrolled as a member of this Chapter. 

Sec. 5. All persons, whose applications are ap- 
proved on or before April 19, 1896, shall be Char- 
ter Members of this Chapter. 

ARTICLE II. 
Object of the Chapter. 

Section 1 . The objects of this Chapter shall be 
the same as provided by Article II of the Constitu- 
tion of the National Society of the Daughters of the 
American Revolution. 

ARTICLE III. 
Officers. 

Section I . The officers of this Chapter shall be 
Chapter Regent, Recording Secretary, Corresponding 
Secretary, Treasurer, Registrar, Historian, Board of 
Management, and such other officers as may be 
deemed necessary. 

Sec. 2. The officers shall be elected by ballot 
by a majority of the members present at the annual 
18 



meeting of the Chapter, and shall hold office for one 
year and until their successors shall be elected. 

Sec. 3. The Board of Management shall con- 
sist of the regular officers of the Chapter and four 
members, two to be elected each year by ballot, at 
the annual meeting of the Chapter, for a term of two 
years each. 

Sec. 4. All vacancies of officers, in the Board 
of Management or on Committees, shall be filled by 
appointment of the Chapter Regent, subject to the 
approval of the Board of Management. 

ARTICLE IV. 

Meetings. 

Section 1 . The annual meeting of the Chapter 
shall be held on May 1 0th. 

Sec. 2. The regular meetings of the Chapter 
shall be held January 6, May 1 0, June 1 4 and Oc- 
tober 19. 

Sec. 3. Special meetmgs of the Chapter may be 
called by the Chapter Regent, or upon the written 
request of five members. Written notice shall be 
given all members of such special meetings. 
19 



Sec. 4. Eleven resident members of the Chapter 
in good and regular standing shall constitute a quo- 
rum of any meeting of this Chapter. 



ARTICLE V. 

Initiation, Dues and Liabilities. 

Section 1. The sum of Three Dollars ($3.00), 
covering the initiation fee and the annual dues for the 
current year, must accompany each application pre- 
sented to the Chapter. 

Sec. 2. A member who shall remain in arrears 
for dues for three months after notice of her indebt- 
edness has been sent her, may be dropped from the 
rolls by the Board of Management, but no one shall 
be dropped until after two notices of arrears shall 
have been given her. 

Sec. 3. No debt or liability, except the ordinary 
current expenses of the Chapter, shall be incurred, 
nor any project or plan requiring the expenditure of 
money shall be entered into, for which the Chapter 
shall be responsible, except by a three-fourths vote of 
the Board of Management. 
20 



ARTICLE VI. 

Nomination and Election of Officers. 

Section 1 . The nomination of officers shall be 
made from the floor and the election shall be by 
ballot. 

Sec. 2. A majority vote of the members present 
shall elect. 

ARTICLE VII. 

. . Duties of Officers. 

Section I . The duties of the officers of the 
Chapter shall be such as usually appertain to their 
offices, and shall not conflict with the National Con- 
stitution and By-Laws. 

Sec. 2. They shall report at the annual meeting 
and at such other times as directed by the Board of 
Management. 

Sec. 3. The Recording Secretary shall keep a 
record of all the meetings of the Society and of the 
Board of Management. 

The Corresponding Secretary shall attend to all 
the correspondence of the Society, shall send out no- 
21 



tices of meetings, and perform such other duties as 
may be directed by the Board. 

The Treasurer shai! receive all dues for member- 
ship. She shall pay all bills when properly endorsed, 
send two notices to members who are delinquent in 
their dues, keep an account of all receipts and dis- 
bursements, keep a list of all members with the Na- 
tional numbers in which must appear all transfers, 
deaths, resignations, or changes in the membership 
from any cause ; send promptly to the Treasurer Gen- 
eral the dues and reports as prescribed by the Na- 
tional Society and the fees and dues of applicants for 
membership. 

The Registrar shall keep a register of the names 
and dates of the admission of all members of the 
Chapter. She shall record removal, resignation, or 
death of any member, and shall notify the Registrar 
General and State Regent of the same. She shall 
apply to the Registrar General for and have care and 
custody of all application blanks. She shall furnish 
two application blanks to any woman who may apply 
for membership in the Chapter, and shall receive and 
examine the same when they have been properly 
filled out; certify to the Board of Management the 
names of all eligible applicants ; forward to the Reg- 
22 



istrar General such applications as may be approved 
by the Chapter, at the same time sending to the 
Treasurer of the Chapter the fees and dues which 
must be received with each application. 



ARTICLE VIII. 

Order of Business. 

Section I . The order of business at a regular 
meeting shall be as follows: 

1 . Singing of America. 

2. Responsive reading. 

3. Roll call. 

4. Reading and approving of minutes of pre- 
vious meeting. 

5. Reports of officers and standing commit- 
tees. 

6. Reports of special committees. 

7. Unfinished business. 

8. New business. 

9. Miscellaneous business. 
1 0. Election of officers. 

1 I . Election of delegates and alternates to 
Continental Congress. 

23 



ARTICLE IX. 
Privileges of Members. 

Section 1 . Any member of the Chapter who shall 
remove and establish her residence within the limits 
of any other Chapter of the National Society of the 
Daughters of the American Revolution, may re- 
ceive from this Chapter a withdrawal and removal 
certificate on payment to the Chapter of all dues to 
the date of request for same. 

Sec. 2. Any member of another Chapter of the 
National Society of the Daughters of the American 
Revolution who shall present to this Chapter proof of 
such membership and a certificate showing her regular 
withdrawal and removal from such other Chapter, 
and that she, at the time of such withdrawal and re- 
moval, was in good and regular standing in same, 
and shall bring certified copy of application papers, 
shall be entitled to become a member of this Chap- 
ter upon application therefor, and upon being accept- 
ed and reported upon as provided by Article I. 

Sec. 3. Any member of another Chapter of the 
National Society of the Daughters of the American 
Revolution who shall be temporarily in the city, shall 
24 



be entitled to attend the meetings of this Chapter, 
upon satisfactory proof of her membership; but shall 
have no voice or vote in the proceedings. 

ARTICLE X. 
Discipline. 

Section I . Any member conducting herself, 
either at the Chapter meetings or elsewhere, in a way 
to disturb the harmony of the Chapter or to impair 
its good name or prosperity, or to injure the reputa- 
tion of any member thereof, may, after thorough in- 
vestigation by the Board of Management, be repri- 
manded, suspended or expelled, as the Local Board 
of Management may decide. 

ARTICLE XL 
Amendments to B})-Laws. 

Section I . These By-Laws may be altered or 
amended by a three-fourths vote of the members 
present at any regular meeting of the Chapter, writ- 
ten notice thereof having been given at a previous 
regular meeting. 



25 



MEMBERS 
of 
FORT STANWIX CHAPTER, 

DAUGHTERS OF 
THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION. 



Admitted. 

1895. 

Mrs. William H. Bright. 
Miss Phebe H. Stryker. 
Mrs. James H. Searles. 

1896. 
Mrs. Oswald P. Backus. 
Miss S. Louise Wright. 
Miss Cora M. Wright. 
Mrs. Cyrus D. Prescott. 
Mrs. Charles W. Ellis. 
Mrs. Franklin A. Ethridge. 
Mrs. James P. Soper. 
Mrs. William F. Tremain. 
Mrs. James E. Barnard. 
Miss M. Elizabeth Beach. 
26 



Miss Sarah B. Hammond. 

Miss Henrietta H. Wrighl'. 

Mrs. F. H. Relyea. 

Mrs. Arthur W. Soper. 

Mrs. James M. Ethridge. 

Mrs. John H. Egar. 

Mrs. Charles E. WardweU. 

Mrs. John D. Archer. 

Mrs. C. C. Reid. 

Mrs. Edward W. Cummings. 

Mrs. Laura B. Haff. 

Mrs. J. S. Haselton. 

Mrs. George E. Bacon. 

Mrs. M. R. Bingham. 

Miss Marian Darrow. 

Mrs. E. H. Leonard. 

Mrs. T. J. Mowry. 

Mrs. John D. McMahon. 

Mrs. Burt Obey. 

Mrs. Charles F. Sturdevant. 

Miss Beulah Wright. 

Mrs. Eugene A. Rowland. 

Mrs. G. W. G. Kinney. 

Mrs. Samuel H. Beach. 

Mrs. John S. Wardwell. 

Mrs. Alice J. Rowland. 

27 



Miss Charlotte Wager. 
Miss Harriet Wager. 
Mrs. William W. Wardwell. 
Mrs. Edward Comstock. 
Mrs. William R. Olney. 
Mrs. George G. Bailey, 

1897. 
Miss Stella M. Haselton. 
Miss Cora B. MacHarg. 
Miss Eugenie Stevens. 
Mrs. Eva S. McDowell. 
Miss Elizabeth M. Flandrau. 
Miss S. Anna Davis. 
Miss Cora 1 . Davis. 
Mrs. Susan V. D. Bowman. 

1 898. 
Mrs. James T. Stone. 
Mrs. Hubert Van Wagenen. 

1899. 
Mrs. Arthur J. Wylie. 

1900. 
Mrs. F. M. Hamlin. 

28 



1901. 
Mrs. William R. Obey jr. 

1902. 

Mrs. Clara B. Lawton. 
Mrs. L. G. Schneible. 
Dr. Mary Armstrong. 
Mrs. J. C. Stranahan. 
Miss Lucy E. Barton. 
Mrs. G. C. Hibbard. 

1903. 
Mrs. H. H. Cumings jr. 
Mrs. George H. Smith. 
Mrs. Sanford Adams. 
Mrs. F. L. Wager. 

1904. 
Mrs. William H. TuUer. 
Mrs. R. W. Jacobs. 
Mrs. George B. Olney. 

1905. 

Mrs. E. L. Hinckley. 
Mrs. Samuel E. Williams. 
Mrs. E. C. Carpenter. 
Miss Ella S. Johnson. 

29 



Mrs. E. E. Miles. 
Mrs. George Clyde. 

1906. 

Mrs. George Barnard. 

Mrs. Stoddard M. Stevens. 

Mrs. Griffith Evans. 

Miss Julia L. Doty. 

Mrs. Charles H. Broughton. 

Miss Helena Evans. 

Mrs. Sidney Phelps. 

1907. 

Mrs. W. B. Bliss. 
Mrs. A. C. Kessinger. 
Miss Ida C. Wood. 
Mrs. W. B. Reid. 



30 



IN MEMORIAM. 

Admitted. Died. 

Miss Mary L. Bissell 1 896 1901 

Miss Anna M. Wright 1 896 1 902 

Mrs. Susan H. White 1896 1904 

Mrs. Polly H. Vincent I 896 1 899 

Mrs. George A. Harrington .... 1 896 1 903 

Mrs. Charles C. Hopkins 1896 1902 

Mrs. Frances D. Mitchell 1896 1899 

Mrs. Sarah U. Baker 1 897 1 900 

Mrs. E. Stuart Williams 1 898 1 902 

Mrs. M. M. Davis 1 899 1 899 

Mrs. E. E. Coe 1901 1902 



31 



FORMER MEMBERS. 

Admitted Resigned. 

Mrs. Copeland Morton I 896 1 905 

Misa E. H. Hannahs 1896 1899 

Mrs. E. B. Nelson 1896 1903 

Miss Jessie B. White 1896 1901 

Mrs. R. C. Briggs 1 896 1 905 

Miss Harriet Hodges 1 896 1 897 

Mrs. John G. Fitz Gerald .... 1897 1903 

Mrs. Myron W. Hunt 1898 1901 

Miss Susan MacHarg 1902 1905 

Miss Jane A. Wright 1902 1906 



TRANSFERRED TO OTHER CHAPTERS. 

Admitted Transferred. 

Mrs. E. A. Willoughby 1897 1903 

Mrs. William C. Ferrill 1897 1898 

Mrs. J. A. Hubbard 1898 1903 

Miss M. J. Tibbits 1900 1906 

Mrs. Edwin D. Tucker 1904 1905 

82 



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011 460 1 



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